Growing the Sweetest Winter Carrots
Who said you can’t grow in the winter? Not us! In fact, the winter carrots Eliot Coleman grows on his farm are actually even sweeter and more flavorful than the more conventionally timed “spring carrots.” If you have a cold house set up, why not give sweet winter carrots a shot?
The following is an excerpt fromThe Winter Harvest Handbook by Eliot Coleman. It has been adapted for the web.
“Sweet Winter Carrots” are our most acclaimed winter crop. Parents in nearby towns tell us all the time how much their children like these crunchy treats. We leave these carrots in place in the soil under the cold houses, digging them over time as needed. The most successful variety we have found thus far for wintering in the soil is ‘Napoli’, a small-size but full-flavor carrot. We plant for October harvest during the last week of July and for later harvests, the first week of August. We plant in soil fertilized by turning under a soil-improving green manure of oats and peas a month before we sow the carrots. We cover large areas of carrots with mobile greenhouses in late October.
Our “Sweet Winter Carrots” are always dug fresh from the soil in which they grow; we dig them outdoors in October and November and from the greenhouse-covered beds in December, January, and February. The in-ground, cold-soil storage further. enhances their flavor, sweetness, and raw-eating crunch so that the last ones harvested in late February are even sweeter than the first. Since the tops remain green under the inner layer, we sell our carrots with one and one-half inches of green top at all times. This makes for a beautiful pack and identifies our carrots as “freshly harvested” rather than from storage, allowing us to charge a premium price.
These carrots have an almost legendary popularity in our markets. We cannot grow enough of them to meet the demand. The tastiness resulting from fall growing and cool-soil storage elevates the humble carrot to another plane. While delivering in our stores we have seen little children rush to the produce counter, entreating their parents to buy lots of “candy carrots.” This crop is at its best for only a five-month season from October through February. Once new top growth begins in March, they start to lose their sweetness.
We have experimented with extending the harvest season of our sweet carrots, but we haven’t succeeded yet. We tried adding a layer of insulation over some beds in mid-January to forestall spring regrowth, but that prevented the important daily influx of sun warmth, causing the carrots and the soil to freeze solid for weeks. The carrots were of poor quality when they thawed. We have also planted carrot varieties that resume their root growth in spring from a late-September/early-October sowing date in hopes of finding one that would be harvestable in April. Thus far the flavor has been disappointing.
We sow a new crop of carrots during the winter to sell in the spring. Our new-year sowings of carrots, made in late December following fall lettuce, are ready for sale by May 10. For these we use the variety ‘Nelson’. This is a deliciously sweet spring carrot, but no matter how tender and flavorful our spring carrots may be, they cannot match the acclaim of our sweet winter carrots.